Micheal is a successful and retired bank robber, he currently lives in a mansion in Los Santos and was the star of the main trailer, however he wants to get back into the game, Trevor is a war veteran and drug addict who lives out in the desert and Franklin is
a young hustler working as a repoman.
Franklin, voiced by Shawn «Solo» Fonteno, is
a young hustler with special driving skills.
Michael and Ben help out
a young hustler.
Set against the neon lights of Seoul's nightlife, two
young hustlers live the fast life raking money as male hosts at an affluent club for cougars.
Not exact matches
Flynt was extremely interested in introducing his daughter» now thirty «three» to the pornographic wonders depicted in his magazine,
Hustler, and to that end molested her on several occasions when she was
young.
Real estate
hustler Boyd (Christian Slater); the battling Berkow brothers, Adam (Daniel Stern) and Michael (Jeremy Piven); and introvert mechanic Moore (Leland Orser) throw a Las Vegas bachelor party for Kyle that is a smashing success, with plenty of booze and drugs - and even a visit from a lithe
young stripper.
The story follows an L.A.
hustler who pairs up with a
young woman who's escaped from a mental hospital and takes her to his brother's wedding, hoping to pass her off as his girlfriend.
Martin McGartland (Jim Sturgess) is a
young adult small - time Belfast
hustler recruited by British intelligence to infiltrate the IRA and be an informer.
This is exemplified in Trading Places, where a wealthy,
young executive is framed and subsequently forced to switch lives with a homeless
hustler.
One gay boy (played by the
young Bob Balaban) is almost assaulted by the
hustler in the toilet of a cinema on Forty - second Street, and a gay man is mugged in his hotel room.
Disney IMAX Films: Aliens of the Deep • Ghosts of the Abyss • Sacred Planet • The
Young Black Stallion Produced by Frank Marshall: Who Framed Roger Rabbit • Eight Below • Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Space in Science Fiction: The Black Hole • 2001: A Space Odyssey • First Spaceship on Venus (MST3K) Featuring Paul Newman (Roving Mars» Introductory Narrator): The
Hustler: Collector's Edition • Cars • The Verdict: Collector's Edition New to DVD: Voyagers!
Duets is the first feature about karaoke I've seen, and Byrum uses it as a suggestive metaphor for the dreams of three sets of characters who've lost their way in terms of their personal and family identities: a karaoke
hustler (Huey Lewis) who meets his daughter — a Vegas showgirl played by Paltrow — for the first time at the funeral of her mother; a traveling salesman (Paul Giamatti) who flips his lid after flying to Houston instead of Orlando and then going home to an indifferent wife and kids, and who eventually splits and hooks up with an ex-con (Andre Braugher); and a
young cabdriver (Scott Speedman) who reluctantly agrees to drive a waitress and part - time hooker (Maria Bello) out west.
And the focus never shifts from the Southern underbelly comprised of obnoxious
hustlers and vagabonds and their hardly more sympathetic prey (which include a little girl who quotes Dead Kennedys» «I Kill Children» and
young teenagers who hose themselves and dance suggestively in the backyard).
That seems to be as reflexive a gesture as Clark can muster from the film's thinly sketched presentation of a group of
young Parisian skaters moonlighting as novice
hustlers, replete with Clark's typically poseur - voyeur aesthetics.
In this dark, agile, sinewy cinema tale of the world of pool halls, pool
hustlers and the gamblers who exploit them, Paul Newman plays the brash, cocky
young pool shark Fast Eddie Felson.
In the movie directed by the duo who gave us «Little Mary Sunshine» — featuring women who want to get their
young daughters into a beauty competition — Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) is the kind of
hustler and self - described male chauvinist pig who want to prove that since women can not beat men in athletics, the sport of tennis is justified in paying male players eight times more than women.
An engagingly rambling film, it seemed content to spend time with its two eccentric characters, Curly Mario, a small time
hustler trying to make a living touring bizarre variety acts to back country villages, and «Charlie Bronson», a handsome but slow - witted
young man whom he takes on when Mario sees he may be a viable meal ticket for him.
Eventually, after leaving home several more times, he ended up a «
hustler,» or
young male prostitute, in California — a repeat juvenile offender, dependent on drugs and dealing in drugs.
When a
young street
hustler, a retired bank robber and a terrifying psychopath find themselves entangled with some of the most frightening and deranged elements of the criminal underworld, the U.S. government and the entertainment industry, they must pull off a series of dangerous heists to survive in a ruthless city in which they can trust nobody, least of all each other.
It is easy to see how Mark Morrisroe's tempestuous biography — teenage
hustler; bohemian bad boy in Boston's punk and artistic circles of the early 1980s; boyfriend to a
young Jack Pierson — has often overshadowed the formal resonance of the photographer's work.